The MYC Trust was used to purchase 195 Hudson Street in an attempt to shield Frankel’s identity as the buyer, according to her current attorney Anthony Auciello. “She was supposed to be the only beneficiary,” of the trust, Auciello said.

Instead the document named both Frankel and Hoppy as beneficiaries, making them co-owners of the property, the suit says.

The Skinnygirl mogul had argued during the divorce that she was the sole owner of the apartment because she funded the purchase, according to court papers.

But Hoppy countered that he was a joint owner because he helped pay for maintenance and renovations.

An appeals court scrapped the trust in a March ruling, finding that the “parties’ signatures were never properly acknowledged.”

Bethenny Frankel and Jason Hoppy in 2012Jason Winslow/Splash News

“Nonetheless, issues of fact exist whether the parties intended to jointly own the apartment, and whether the husband was involved in any fraud in the preparation and execution of the trust agreement,” a four-judge panel found.

The appellate panel told a lower court to decide who would get the 3,400-square-foot Tribeca pad in their divorce.